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单词 televise
释义

televisev.

Brit. /ˈtɛlᵻvʌɪz/, U.S. /ˈtɛləˌvaɪz/
Forms: 1900s– televise, 1900s– televize.
Origin: Formed within English, by back-formation. Etymon: television n.
Etymology: Back-formation < television n., after other verbs in -vise which are related to nouns ending in -vision (e.g. revise v., supervise v.); perhaps reinforced by televisor n.
1. intransitive. To make television transmissions; to make a television broadcast.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > television > make television broadcast [verb (intransitive)]
televise1926
1926 Derby Daily Tel. 17 Apr. 2/6 Ere long we shall telepath and televise, on the principle that every useful noun carries a verb in its knapsack.
1927 Glasgow Herald 9 Apr. 10 It will be a short step to ‘televise’ over vast areas of land and sea.
1948 L. Birch Something Done (Central Office of Information) 15 Many performers who are under contract to the big music-halls are not allowed to televise.
1998 Marketing Week (Electronic ed.) 25 June They have everyone..paying through the nose to be associated with them: to host, to sponsor, to televise.
2.
a. transitive. To transmit by or broadcast on television; to film or record for television. Frequently in passive. Also in extended use.Formerly also spec.: to transmit or create images of (a person) by means of television technology (see, e.g., quot. 1928).
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > television > production of television broadcast > transmit by television [verb (transitive)]
televise1926
society > communication > broadcasting > television > production of television broadcast > transmit by television [verb (transitive)] > transmit television pictures of
televise1926
video1944
1926 Scotsman 20 Dec. 6/8 Velvety darkness and a slight suggestion of warmth..being all that indicates that one's image is being ‘televised’.
1928 Television Mar. 40/3 The subject who is being ‘televised’ had to face a powerful battery of blinding lights.
1931 Daily Progress (Charlottesville, Va.) 2 May 3/4 The first marriage ceremony to be ‘televised’, if that's the word—is a matter of history today.
1950 Sport 7 Apr. 22/2 The Final will definitely not be televised.
1975 Observer 6 Apr. (Colour Suppl.) 64 (advt.) It [sc. a series of books on history] is a ‘programme’ which..televises the past for you and your children to understand and enjoy as never before.
1983 Economist 23 July 24/1 The BBC's Panorama programme on blacks and the police, televised on July 18th.
2013 H. Purvis & S. Sharp Voices of Razorbacks vi. 132 It is now rare for a game not to be televised.
b. intransitive. With adverb, as well, badly, etc.: to be suited to being broadcast on television; to come across on television in a specified way.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > television > make television broadcast [verb (intransitive)] > be suited for television
televise1930
screen1949
1930 Times 1 Apr. 28/3 Some faces appear to ‘televise’ better than others.
1961 G. Millerson Technique Television Production 129 Where an iconoscope camera-tube is used as the pick-up device, film shots of dark scenes may televise better in negative form.
1979 N.Y. Times Mag. 30 Sept. 17/3 How to make hockey, which televises badly, more attractive to the network?
2010 in S. G. Riley Star Struck 228/1 His genuine, relaxed demeanor televised well.

Derivatives

ˈtelevised adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > television > [adjective] > broadcast on television
televised1927
on-screen1963
screened1966
1927 N.Y. Times 29 Jan. 5/6 Mr. Baird..produced phonograph records of televised faces which were quite distinct.
1951 M. Ehrlich Big Eye i. 34 The blonde began to take off her robe in a kind of televised strip tease.
1978 S. Brill Teamsters iii. 80 Fumbling through televised testimony like this to protect Hoffa was worth it to Fitzsimmons.
2012 Guardian 6 Oct. (Review section) 9/4 Biafra was the world's first properly televised conflict.
ˈtelevising n. and adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > television > production of television broadcast > [noun]
televising1928
society > communication > broadcasting > television > production of television broadcast > [adjective]
televising1928
1928 N.Y. Times Mag. 15 Apr. 21/1 We are confronted with telephoning and televising as realities.
1957 D. J. Enright Apothecary's Shop 221 True pleasure—our moralizing, politicizing and..televising generation has thrown that overboard.
2003 Philadelphia Tribune 11 Feb. I'm part of the televising team.., so I have to see the workouts.
2009 Church Times 2 Jan. 25/5 The televising was, almost without exception, of a worthy quality.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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